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Although there ha <a href="http://www.jordansretrotrade.com/">Retro Jordans</a> ve been some official studies about the impact of tourism on Jordan's environm <a href="http://www.jordansretrotrade.com/">Cheap Jordan Shoes</a> ent, it is only recently that the damage from tourism to the environment and traditional lifestyles of Jordanians,Retro Jorda <a href="http://www.jordansretrotrade.com/">Air Jordan Shoes</a> ns, particularly the Bedouin, have been taken seriously. As in most other traditional societies, unrestrained tourism from Western countries can create a dichotomy between the host and visiting cultures, often exacerbated by thoughtless Westerners who, for example, drink alcohol in public or wear skimpy clothes. In places such as Wadi Musa (Petra) - a traditional Bedouin community which has been inundated w ith tourists since 1994 - this clash of cultures has been particularly pronounced (see lingers & Annoyances in the Facts for the Visitor chapter and the boxed text ?Warning* in the Petra chapter for more details).

Vast differences between the cultures of the West and Jordan can cause many problems: there is resentment from locals who have little or no opportunity for improvement; social values change as young Jordanians pick up unattractive habits from the West,Cheap Jordan Shoes, eg,Air Jordan Shoes, swearing, drinking alcohol and taking drugs; and education suffers as the youth flock to tourist areas in search of a fast buck.

Also, the cost of housing and rent in places like Wadi Musa and Aqaba is often high, so locals cannot afford to live where they like; and land is sometimes bought by richer Jordanians solely for speculative purposes. Prices for fruit, meat and vegetables are often high in tourist areas, because of the demand for these goods from upmarket, big-spending hotels.